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I have JSON similar to this . I wish to extract values like name, his id, and product title from this list . But I am not able to figure it out . I was trying "eval" for the same.

{
    "data": [{
        "id": "3092773937557",
        "from": {
            "id": "1810306393",
            "name": "Prashant Singh"
        },
        "start_time": "2012-07-21T09:12:53+0000",
        "end_time": "2012-07-21T09:12:53+0000",
        "publish_time": "2012-07-21T09:12:53+0000",
        "application": {
            "id": "132692593533721",
            "name": "Compare Hatke"
        },
        "data": {
            "productname": "Apple iPod Nano",
            "price": 399,
            "product": {
                "id": "10151004296768984",
                "url": "http:\/\/compare.buyhatke.com\/products\/Apple-iPod-Nano",
                "type": "comparehatke:product",
                "title": "Apple iPod Nano"
            }
        },
        "likes": {
            "count": 0
        },
        "comments": {
            "count": 0
        },
        "no_feed_story": false
    }, {
        "id": "3092770217464",
        "from": {
            "id": "1810306393",
            "name": "Prashant Singh"
        },
        "start_time": "2012-07-21T09:08:53+0000",
        "end_time": "2012-07-21T09:08:53+0000",
        "publish_time": "2012-07-21T09:08:53+0000",
        "application": {
            "id": "132692593533721",
            "name": "Compare Hatke"
        },
        "data": {
            "productname": "Apple iPod Nano",
            "price": 399,
            "product": {
                "id": "10151004296768984",
                "url": "http:\/\/compare.buyhatke.com\/products\/Apple-iPod-Nano",
                "type": "comparehatke:product",
                "title": "Apple iPod Nano"
            }
        },
        "likes": {
            "count": 0
        },
        "comments": {
            "count": 0
        },
        "no_feed_story": false
    }],
    "paging": {
        "next": "https:\/\/graph.facebook.com\/me\/comparehatke:compare\/?access_token=AAAB4rubm4xkBAHRhdjVgx7JxIIvUxImIm31AMxgnqEAOQsAsgZAJjBYUfvzKc8XgxDBg3AzKN1S6QU2dnmtgj7TPcoCiih1RzrL3pLpuZAgGt8eKpq&limit=2&method=get&pretty=0&offset=2"
    }
}
4
  • 2
    Show your code and what you have tried. It is also invalid json or you copypasted it wrong
    – Esailija
    Jul 21, 2012 at 8:52
  • Its definitely, not complete. But this is what, I received from facebook graph API Jul 21, 2012 at 8:57
  • 1
    possible duplicate of How to parse JSON in JavaScript
    – kamaci
    Jul 21, 2012 at 8:58
  • I have added a valid JSON now. Those of u , who were shouting for that reason, should answer to my query now Jul 21, 2012 at 9:25

2 Answers 2

0
<html>
   <script style="text/javscript">
    var myObject = { "data": [{
        "id": "3092741696751",
        "from": {
        "id": "1810306393",
        "name": "Prashant Singh"
    },
     "start_time": "2012-07-21T08:40:38+0000",
     "end_time": "2012-07-21T08:40:38+0000",
     "publish_time": "2012-07-21T08:40:38+0000",
     "application": {
     "id": "132692593533721",
     "name": "Compare Hatke"
     },
     "data1": {
         "productname": "Apple iPod Nano",
         "price": 399,
         "product": {
         "id": "10151004296768984",
         "url": "http:\/\/compare.buyhatke.com\/products\/Apple-iPod-Nano",
         "type": "comparehatke:product",
         "title": "Apple iPod Nano"
      }
      },
      "likes": {
      "count": 0
      },
      "comments": {
      "count": 0
      },
      "no_feed_story": false
      } ]};
   alert(myObject.data[0].id);
   </script>
 </html>
6
  • I guess what I meant to say is, "json" is simply javascript object literals.
    – Dale
    Jul 21, 2012 at 9:05
  • Where did you get the idea that "the rest of the web" copied Google with "inline objects"? JSON is not a fundamental data structure to JavaScript, and is not simply JS object literals. JSON is a string representation of data that uses similar syntax to JS object literal syntax. JSON is intended for data transfer; when JavaScript code receives some JSON (most commonly via an Ajax request) it needs to parse or eval it to get an actual JS object.
    – nnnnnn
    Jul 21, 2012 at 9:05
  • Actually, JSON is a fundamental data structure to js. I don't want to start a flame war here. Think about it, when you send off json via js, you do not have to encode or decode. It is only when you deal with other languages that you start to deal with the encode decode nonsense. Javascript started the json syntax, and that is what it has evolved into today. It absolutely is an object literal in js. Thinking about the stuff otherwise makes any web developers life more difficult.
    – Dale
    Jul 21, 2012 at 9:14
  • @Dale it says undefined. Neither eval nor ur solution is working Jul 21, 2012 at 9:15
  • sorry man, updated. I too fell into the, "don't think about it like not a js object trap." Updated
    – Dale
    Jul 21, 2012 at 9:38
0
data = JSON.parse(yourJSONString);

If this fails, you likely have an error in your JSON. You can use http://jsonlint.com/ to find and resolve the problem. In the paste above, you're missing your closing ]}.

5
  • ie8+.....its better to use json2. (github.com/douglascrockford/JSON-js/blob/master/json2.js)
    – Royi Namir
    Jul 21, 2012 at 8:53
  • Browser implementation bug. I'd say start simple - and start with a good dev environment :D
    – arbales
    Jul 21, 2012 at 8:58
  • 1
    People shouldn't troll answers with legacy browser stuff unless the OP has specified a requirement for that. IE8 supports JSON.parse anyway.
    – Esailija
    Jul 21, 2012 at 8:59
  • @Esailija I didnt troll an answer , just comment for version support. so if another person will see this message , he will know that.
    – Royi Namir
    Jul 21, 2012 at 9:23
  • @RoyiNamir ok, sorry. But you could have edited the answer to be better. Not many people read comments :)
    – Esailija
    Jul 21, 2012 at 9:26

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